Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 July 1939 — Page 6

m -_

Diz’s Wife Blames Midnight Phone Call for His Arm Injury

HE whole affair was kept a secret by Hartnett until after the Cubs’ double-header against Brooklyn at Brocklyn yesterday, although later it was learned that Dizzy and his wife checked out of the Commodore in New York yesterday morning. This was the first trip of the year that she had accompanied him. There has been a lot of tension on the team since Dean’s recent statement blaming the Cubs’ poor showing on the failure of certain He did not name them. Dean’s $20,000 salary is resented by the lesser paid players who per-

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P= Ssumoh, July 17 (U. P.).—Dizzy Dean, the Chicago Cubs’ P= 000 beauty, listened sleepily early today_while his wife explained how he had received a lacerated arm. Manager Gabby Hartnett had seat the talkative one home from New York last night, saying he would not “tolerate” any player breaking training rules. Dizzy’s left arm was heavily bandaged. When the train carrying Dizzy to Chicago, where he will explain to the Cub’s front office, arrived here, reporters found Mrs. Dean asleep in the lower berth of their drawing room and Dizzy asleep in the upper. Upon being awakened, he was too sleepy to talk, but she wasn't. “Tell them exactly what happened, Jerome,” she commanded of the prone figure in the berth above her. There was nc response, and she continued: “The telephone rang in the middle of the night in the hotel in New York. Jerome reached out in the dark to answer it. His arm

hit the glass top of the telephone table and knocked over a lamp. The lamp broke the glass top and Jerome cut his arm on the broken glass.” “It’s nothing at all,” Dizzy mumbled from above. “They just put two stitches in it. It hardly cut the skin. I can still work. I'm going to rejoin the team in Chicago next Sunday. 8 =» '» 2 nn» DON’T see why all the fuss,” said Mrs. Dean. “It’s his left arm. If it was his right arm it would be different.” “Hartnett says he won't tolerate any player breaking training,” one of the reporters said. “Did Gabby say that?” asked Mrs. Dean. She then terminated the interview. The Deans wouldn't talk when they left New York last night. A story circulated in New Yecrk that Dizzy got tangled up with

a plate glass cigar counter Saturday night, but it could not be verified. The physician who treated Dean there was not located until early today and his description of the wound did little to corroborate the cigar-counter rumor.

“I was called to the Hotel Commodore about 24 hours ago to attend Dean,” Dr. Reynold E. Church said. “I found a sharp laceration which required two stitches to close.” When baseball writers traveling with the club pointed out that a men who poked his arm through a sheet of glass was not likely to receive only a single, sharp wound, they received stony glares in reply. It was all very mysterious, and not even Traveling Secretary Bob Lewis woulc give a hint as to what had happened. The Cub office in Chicago said only: “Dean already has told two stories.”

Cubs to co-operate.

form every day.

It was known that

Dean has been a big disappointment to Hartnett this season. He got off to a fair start, winning four games in the first two months of the season, but he was belted out of the box in his last four trips to the mound, and Gabby was plenty peeved.

~ By Eddie Ash

A. A. ALL-STAR LINEUP NAMED NO INDIANS TO START AT K. C.

JFOSTER GANZEL, St. Paul manager, who will direct the American All-Stars against the league leading Kansas City Blues in Kawton tomorrow night, today announced his lineup and batting order for the midseason classic. His starting pitcher will be Nate Andrews, big righthander and the ace of the Columbus staff. . .. The Stars’ batting order will be Chet Morgan, Louisville, rf; Jimmy Bucher, Columfus, 2b; Ab Wright, Minneapolis, If; Phil Weintraub, Minneapolis, 1b; Gil English, St. Paul, 3b; Harvey Walker, Minneapolis, cf; Otto Denning, Minneapolis, ¢; Harold Reese, Louisville, ss, and Andrews. Indianapolis, Milwaukee and Toledo Ail-Star members did not pull enough votes to win starting assignments, Ganzel said. . . . The rules governing the game call for the top ballot getters to open the battle. = = = EJ 2 on HE All-Stars’ chief plans to give the other boys a chance as the innings go by. . . . They are Catchers Bill Baker, Indianapolis, and John Pasek, St. Paul; Outfielders Myron McCormick, Indianapolis, and Stanley Spence, Louisville; Infielders Johnny Hill, Milwaukee; Jimmy Pofahl, Minneapolis, and Frank Madura, St. Paul. In addition to Andrews, Pilot Ganzel's chuckers are Freddie Hutchinson, Toledo; Bill Butland, Minneapolis, and John Niggeling, Indianapolis. Bob Logan, Indianapolis southpaw who won an All-Star berth, was injured yesterday and will have to pass up the big event. He will be replaced by Lloyd Brown of St. Paul.

2 = # 2 = =

Two Delegations From Indianapolis

1.= T. MILLER, Indianapolis club president, will lead one delegation to Kansas City, departing late this afternoon. . . . The second party, headed by Ganzel, will leave at midnight. . . Accompanying him will be St. Paul and Indianapelis players who are members of the All-Star squad. Umpires John Conlan and Ernie Stewart also will head for K. Cc. after tonight's St. Paul-Indianapolis series finale. Dale Miller, Tribe secretary, will accompany the second delegation. « . . Dooley Cooper, New York Central passenger agent, is directing the transportation.

Tribesmen

Times Sports

ToEndLong Home Stand

PAGE 6

MONDAY, JULY 17, 1939

Adair Is Expected to Break Into Lineup Tonight Against Saints.

The Indians are to close out their long home stand in the series finale

with the Saints tonight and a change is planned in the Tribe lineup by Manager Schalk. Jimmy Adair, up from Birmingham, reported today and is expected to break in at second base. In the event that Adair is ready Jesse Newman will be shifted to the first sack in place of Bob Latshaw. Schalk probably will have to pitch | § John Niggeling, his ace, despite the|§ fact the veteran is a member of the § American Association All-Stars who! are to battle the Blues in Kansas City tomorrow night. Lefty Bob Logan was lost to the] team for 10 days or two weeks when | a line drive fractured a small bone in his right forearm. He was struck while pitching in the second inning of yesterday's first game and was forced to give way. Frank Madura, St. Paul second sacker, hit the blow which sent Logan to the sidelines.

Play in Six Cities

After tonight's ladies’ attraction the Redskins will say farewell to Perry Stadium until Aug. 7 when they return to meet Columbus. On the road trip the Tribesters will perform in six cities, Milwaukee, Kansas City, St. Paul, Minneapolis, Columbus and Toledo, in the order named. It will be the Indians’ third swing through the West where they met disaster twice. This time the Redskins will be packing a stronger punch and a better infield, and they hope to cash

lace, William Krieg.

Tuned for |. A. C. Tennis Play

These four ol players, doubles finalists in the Indianapolis ‘Athletic Club’s tournament last year, are preparing for this year’s meet, which will start this week. They are (left to right) Warrack WalAl Camnvubell and Tom Hendricks. Wallace and Hendricks will be playing for their fifth straight doubles title.

Just to Say Picard Won Hardly Tells

Campbell is singles defending champion, and

Reds Get Double Dose Of Anti-Pennant Tonic From Beantown Bees

But Giants Also Slip and Leaders Lose Only Half a Game.

By GEORGE KIRKSEY United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, July 17.—Every time the Cincinnati Reds feel proud of |} themselves and start strutting, some | other club pins their ears back. The Boston Bees gave the Reds a double dose of antipennant tonic |} yesterday. The Rhinelanders had |: been crowing about taking two out of three from the Giants in thel: turbulent Polo Grounds series. Funny thing about this Cincinnati club, every time they take it on the chin, they pull themselves together and get back to their job with neatness | and dispatch. The Reds lost only half a game in the pennant race as the Car-|§ dinals took over the Giants, 3-1. Thus Cincinnati is in no immediate danger with a six-game lead. In losing to the Bees, 3-0, and 4-3, the |g Reds have themselves largely tol blame. They couldn’t hit Sailor Bill Posedel’s chucking in the opener, s and they made disastrous errors in both games.

Scores Ninth Victory

Posedel allowed six hits in the opener, scoring his ninth victory and his third shutout. Lee Grissom helped lose his own game by throwing Al Lopez's tap so far and high over Frank McCormick's head that Eddie Miller scored all the way from first. Later Lopez scored on a sacrifice fly. In the second game, Whitey Moore contributed to his own downfall by flinging Jim Turner’s bunt past Bil Werber, which allowed the

Eddie Miller . . . Out for at least a month.

Softball League To Open on Dec. 1

Story of That Match of Super Golfers

first nine holes of the final round to clip par by five strokes. And what do you think it gained him? EW YORK July 17.—Henry Picard beat Byron | Nothing. Absolutely nothing. Picard matched the Nelson one-up in 37 holes to win the cham- | 32. He met miracle with miracle, unbelievable shot pionship of the Professional Golfers’ Association at | With unbelievable shot. the Pomonok Country Club Saturday. This wasn’t in a 50-cent Nassau match, mind you. That's the way it will stand in the record book. | Picard and Nelson were playing for one of the But that is only the result. To say Picard beat | great golf titles, with money and fame riding on Nelson, and let it go at that, is like saying the | each shot and with a howling gallery thundering at Indians beat Custer, the Titantic hit an iceberg, and | their heels. The pressure was there, and plenty, but the Allies won the World War. There is a story | niether man yielded an inch. back of that one little line, a story that perhaps Nelson lost, to be sure, but he didn’t lose by has no parallel in golf. cracking apart. He shot the 36th and 37th holes in It is a story of men bringing golf to the highest | par figures, But that wasn’t good enough. Picard pitch we have ever known; a story of golf games | slapped two birdie threes at him. Picard beat Nelso brilliant, so superbly wrought that par became | son, not Nelson. : as nothing and birdies and even eagles were needed 2 2 =» ays Hesiern SIUb in fhe Asst to win a hole. O show you what golf was played in the

AMLIN is far from being a youngster. . .. He is 33.years old and After winning a thriller from # 2 = PS journameni—and 1 Believe S01 is. ; ; : we Minneapolis Saturday night. 8 to 5 reaching a “ceiling” and can’t possibly get much has been in organized baseball since 1928, when he broke in with |; p rday night, , HERE have been many great rounds of golf | potter Nelson was 38 under par during the tournaHanover, Va. . . . He shuttled around the minors and in and out of |!O Sweep the series, the home boys played since the first Scotsman started hack- | ment and couldn’t get any better than second place. a Detroit Tiger uniform until the Dodgers purchased him from Mil- pi apart in the second stanza of| ing a feather ball. But not until Saturday, at In his match play rounds Picard fired 38 birdies, a waukee at the close of the 1936 season. Jos erday’s first tilt and the Apos-| pomonok, did two competitors become super golfers pair of eagles, 124 pars, and only five bogies. There Three times in the minors he reached the 20 mark in victories. |tles staged an eight-run rally. at one and the same time. It is hard to believe, I | wasn't a six on Picard’s card, from the opening day But in his first year with the Dodgers he hung up only 11 triumphs Wilson, Logan, Lisenbee and Balas| know, but Nelson had a 67 in the morning round,

; . until the close. against 13 defeats and last year his mark was 12 and 15. ... He was |toiled on the Tribe rubber and| ; five under par 67, and sfill went in to lunch one It was such a tremendously thrilling match. the out with a side injury for three weeks in 1938. Harry Taylor and Babe Phelps| jon. ¥ 5 %

a ; ; . Picard-Nelson final, that it did a lot to remove the I nS Ly This would have convinced the ordinary golfing | bad taste of the strike and dissension that marred Th Rare fe ron he Star¢| mortal that it was not in the books for him to win. | the start of the tourney. The P. G. A. is not at ; : But Nelson was no ordinary golfing mortal Saturday. | peace, however. Its final fall meeting should be but the Saints’ early lead was t00| He came back in the afternoon and shot a 32 on the

grest to overcome worth the attention of the war correspondents. ° Fr ick Deals Out twice, 3-2 and 6-3. Ted Lyons out-

Sm Mi U r el Adams Re la ins dueled Dutch Leonard in the open-

St. Paul garnered 15 hits and InF ines of $400 ® ® er. Thornton Lee gave up 11 hits,

(Fisst Game) dianapolis 14. The Tribe attack was Wom en ’S Ci ty Net Ti { l e but kept them scattered to cop the

000 000 000— 0 6 1 ieatured by Don Lang's home run. second. Roger Hooker, former Butler star,

NEW YORK, July 17 (U. P.).— Formation of the National Professional Indoor Baseball League was complete today, with franchises in 12 cities. The season will open Dec. 1 and continue through March 7, with a world series between the champions of the two divisions following immediately. Three games will be played each week, all of them at night indoors. Cities in the league area: Eastern

division—New York, Brooklyn, Bos=ton, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and Toronto; Western division—Indianapolis, Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland, St. Louis and Cincinnati.

tying run to score. Turner was credited with his second victory of the year although he had to be relieved in the ninth with one out and runners on second and third. Fred Frankhouse did the fireman's act, retiring Frey and Bongiovanni to end the game. Eddie Miller, Bees’ shortstop, suffered a fracture of the left ankle when he collided with Al Simmons in the nightcap, and he will be out of the lineup for at least a month. Cubs Split With Dodgers The Cubs and Dodgers broke even, Chicago winning the opener, 9-2, and Brooklyn taking the nightcap, 4-0. Claude Passeau and Larry French combined to beat the Dodgers in the opener. Van Mungo and Red Evans let the Cubs down with four hits in winning the afterpiece. Hugh Mulcahy pitched the Phil= lies to a 3-2 victory over the Pirates in the first game, but the Corsairs put on a six-run rally in the seventh frame to grab the nightcap, 7-3. The Yankees, all over their shakes, put on a grand show before 63,064 persons in Cleveland as they won from the Indians twice, 5-2 and 8-3. The Red Sox pennant bee kept buzzing as they triumphed over the Tigers twice, 9-2 and 3-0, to run their winning streak to 12 straight. The White Sox beat the Senators

in on the improvements. Always tough for the Hoosiers to beat, the Saints rolled into town yesterday and rolled up a doubleheader victory before more than 4000 fans. The scores were 11 to 6 and 4 to 2.

Victory March Halted

The double knockdown was a bitter dose for the Schalkmen. It snapped their latest winning streak at seven straight, splashed cold water on their chase for second place and dropped them 13 games behind the league leading Blues. The twin victory shoved St. Paul into fourth place ahead of Louisville and once again the Indians are

No regular games will be played in the American Association tomorrow and Wednesday. . Action is to be resumed on Thursday with the Eastern clubs in the West. . Indianapolis will start its swing at Milwaukee. : 8 » 2 2 ” ”

N keeping with their most successful season since 1932, the Brooklyn Dodgers appear to have an even chance of turning up with their first 20-game pitcher in seven years. Whitlow Wyatt has pitched the most consistent ball on the staff to date, but Luke Hamlin leads the Brooklyn pitchers in victories with nine, one more than Wyatt. In the last three weeks Hamlin has greatly improved his earnedrun average, reducing it from a high of 4.44 to the present 3.70. . Last season, when he won only 12 games, his mark was 3.68 for 237 innings. With 134 innings of toil already behind him, Luke appears certain to pitch almost twice as many innings as last year. = = = # = =

20-Game Winner in Minors

By HENRY M'LEMORE United Press Staff Correspondent

Tribe at Bat

Galatzer, of Baker, c McCormick, of.. Richardson, if Newman, if ... Lang, if . Latshaw, if Moore, c¢

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(Second Game) visitors got three safeties apiece. NEW YORK, July 17 (U. P)—An Sor Jo 100—2 1 2| The Indians left 12 runners Umpire, a manager and two players and Harland Clift hit homers. In

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hitless for three innings of the nightcap and until after two down in the fourth. He issued free transportation to Silvestri and hits by Anton, Jackson and York.

played in too close with two runners on base and he walloped one over Galatzer for a triple. rally was good for three runs.

tranded in that one and 11 in the|were convinced today that fighting on the ball field is not worth the cost. They totaled up a bill of $400 in fines and 20 days in suspensions assessed by National League President Ford Frick. Umpire George Magerkurth and Shortstop Billy Jurges of the New York Giants drew the heaviest punishment for their part in the fight during the Giants-Cincinnati Reds game Saturday. Frick fined each $150 and "banished them without pay for 10 days.

Red Barrett held the Apostles

York fooled the home guard. They

The The Redskins tallied a pair in the

opening game, Miss Muriel Adams defeated Miss Helen Fechtman, 6-1, 6-0, to retain for the sixth consecutive time the City women’s tennis championship. She scored her victory yesterday at the Tech courts. It was her eighth championship in the nistory of the tournament. Play in the men’s singles has advanced to the final matca to be played later this ‘week between

and Ralph Burns, the tep-seeded

defending champion. Burns advanced to the finals by defeating Vic Kingdon, 6-0, 3-6, 7-5, 6-4. Hooker eliminated Boh Parrctt 6-0, 6-8, 6-3, 6-0, chiefly because of superior control. Parrett himself pulled a surprise Saturday in the quarterfinal round when he upset Raymond Von Spreckelsen, 4-6, 6-2, 6-4. His victory was the

more surprising since a few days, &

ago Von Spreckelsen easily had downed Parrett to win the final

the second game the Browns and the A's batted 12 innings to a 5-5! tie, the game being called because | of darkness.

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first frame on a single by Lang, a walk by McCormick and singles by Newman and Richardson. The last named batted in the runs.

Works Out of Holes

After the first, Lefty Lloyd Brown pitched out of holes and there was no further Tribe scoring. On two occasions the Indians left three on base. St. Paul got to Barrett again in the seventh for a fourth run before Johnson relieved him. Galatzer and Richardson accounted for six of the Tribe's nine hits, getting three apiece. Trying for his 100th hit of the season, Myron McCormick walked twice and failed to find a safe spot in two other trips to the plate. The Indians are two under the league player limit with 19 on the active list, and President Leo Miller is in the market for another outfielder. With Logan crippled, only 18 players are available for service. Einar Sorensen departed last night to join Birmingham and Roy Easterwood was shipped Saturday.

Hoffa A. C.’s Lose

The Hoffa A. Cs, farm club of the Gold Medal Beers, dropped a 5-3 decision to the Edinburg, Ind. Merchants at the downstate diamonds yesterday. The Hoffa Club is seeking a game for next Sunday. Write, wire or phone Clyde Hoffa, | i; | manager, 1228 Oliver Ave., or phone Belmont 0340.

| Manager Bill Terry of the Giants got a $50 fine for “failure to co-op-erate with umpires” in quelling the fight. Catcher Harry Danning drew a $50 penalty for shouldering Umpire Lee Ballanfant. It was Ballanfant’s decision on Harry Craft's liner into the left field stands that precipitated the argument. It landed near the foul pole and Ballafant called it fair for a ihome run. The Giants claimed it was foul.

match in the junior division of the tournament. Results of yesterday's matches:

WOMEN'S SINGLES Muriel Adams defeated Helen Fechtman, 1, 6-0 (final match). MEN’S SINGLES Ralph Bi Byline defeated Vic Kingdon, 6-0,

Muncie Rider Wins Two Feature Races

Harold Caldwell, speedy Muncie g_; rider, carried off top honors in the Midwest Motorcycle Club’s racing 2 - defeated’ Bob Ny I Srila 6- o * 6- RoE i deena uy main events—the six-mile feature MEN'S DOUBLES : in which winners of previous races.Sev BuschmanWayne Burns de sated participated and the four-mile race Morse-Nelson Johnson defeated Ralph for experts. Hi Alexander deteated Paul Crabbe William Price of Dayton, O., who Stanle Malless, 6-4, 6-1: Fritz Huntwon the three-mile amateur race john uri “de defeated Dan Morse- Nelson, and the three-mile novice-amateur | event, finished second behind Caldwell in the main event. Maurice Heffner of Lima, O., was third. Caldwell’s time for the 12-lap race was 7:34.89.

Mad Russian Hits

DALLAS, July 17 (NEA).—The Texas League has a Mad Russian. His name is Louie Novikoff. He is one of the leading batters. Weak fielding cost him a berth with Kansas City last season.

GAMES TODAY AMERICAN ASSOCIATION St. Paul at Indianapolis, night game.

Minneapolis at Louisville, night game.

Milwaukee at Columbus Jitway City at Toledo, Spiay at later date.

New York Cleveland

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A number of appearances has been arranged for the Negro House of David baseball team here tomorrow before the bewhiskered athletes swing into their game with the Kingan Reliables tomorrow night, at Perry Stadium. The entire squad will lunch at the Kingan plant at 12:30 p. m. and give a demonstration of its famous “pepper game.” Then the bearded players will visit Bethel playground, Cornelius playground and Camp Sullivan. Tomorrow night's game will begin at 8:15.

Lightweight Discus

DENVER, July 17 (NEA) —A new discus, weighing 14 ounces less than {the type used by college athletes, was introduced at the Colorado state high school meet.

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